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Character gender statistic

  • ImmortalCX
    ImmortalCX
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    ok so this again...long story short:
    The Reason why human males play games with female characters especially on 3rd person camera its as simple as that...the 4$$ and curves...because in the end we are the ones who spend 10-18 hours per day watching at someone's butt(and not getting arrested) and for a majority of people including me that would be a nice woman(cat/lizard) body shape glancing...sure I have no issues playing male characters but just as stated...if im to spend 18 hours looking at someones butt then it rather be a woman's back!

    P.S. also this is one of the main reason you dont really see children in mmos...cuz I assume staring at a child 24/7 goes against some laws? and if so then why do we still have crown crates and gambling stuff in games?...the irony right?

    This is why Lara Croft, Tomb Raider was so successful, and it set a precedent for the genre. Some genius figured out that watching an attractive woman from 3rd person was much better than watching some anonymous "he man".
  • jlmurra2
    jlmurra2
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    I have fifteen characters, eight are male, seven are female. This way I get to see all the fashion options, since armor appearance changes between male, and females.
  • Danikat
    Danikat
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    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    Osteos wrote: »
    From my experience meeting and playing with lots of different people, most players have both. I am female and most of my characters are female, when I have the option I usually take advantage of it. I do have 2 male characters though simply because that is what I envisioned when making the character.


    Oh and the "there's no women on the internet" joke isn't funny and just makes you a beef wit.

    It's not really a joke, it's a philosophy. One of the great features that the internet provides is anonymity. By telling your gender you are reducing the anonymity you enjoy, effectively diminishing one of its great features.

    Furthermore, saying you're a woman and then presenting an argument will give you more support than your actual idea deserves, because there will inevitably be some white knights who will want to show you that they are the good guys that you should let in your pants (regardless of whether they have a chance). This results in discussions being derailed, and in the early days of the internet (i.e. when this meme was created) was justifiably seen as a manipulative tactic to win an argument, because if your intent was not to manipulate, you wouldn't mention your gender, as it's irrelevant to most discussions taking place.

    On top of that there is a safety concern. People (both male and female) are more likely to want to help women and more likely to trust women. So anyone posing as a woman (even if it's a man) has an easier time exploiting or defrauding someone online. So to protect yourself it's best to assume that anyone who claims to be a woman is actually a man, unless you can verify it.

    In essence the main reason that this meme is singling out women, is because most internet users at the time when this meme was created were indeed men. But the essence of this meme is that what you have between your legs is irrelevant, what's relevant are your arguments.

    It never meant that there are literally no women on the internet, it was just the desire to create a perfect meritocracy where factors determining social status IRL (like gender, but also wealth, family background, race, education etc) would not influence the discourse, and ideas would stand on their own merit.

    Now I can of course see why you would think it makes one a "beef wit" by making that statement. You've been told since the 60's (with increasing intensity as time went by) that men are superficial and shallow, only think about one thing, and that everything men do is an assertion of male dominance over women. Hence this statement must be a territorial claim like "internet belongs to men" to be in line with everything you've been told all your life, so it's not surprising at all that you resort to outrage and insults, as you perceive it as nothing but misogyny and chauvinism. But it would do you good if you did learn about the meaning of the memes before stating your opinion on them, because then you would show the men who are actual misogynists and chauvinists that the stereotypes they hold about women are not true.

    So yeah, there are no women on the internet.

    That's interesting, I always thought it was pretty much the exact opposite. If you say you're a woman you're opening yourself up to some people (no not all, but enough that it's annoying) immediately dismissing your contributions to absolutely any discussion as uninformed or irrelevant so if you want to be taken seriously it's best to keep quiet on that point.

    Likewise it tends to lead to any request for help being derailed with irrelevant comments and decidedly unwelcome 'offers' which have absolutely nothing to do with the actual request so if you actually want help with anything it's best to just let them assume you're a man and therefore assume you are otherwise fully capable and not an object of interest for them so they'll just answer the question and move on.

    I once walked into a shop in real life and asked one of the staff "What's the largest capacity USB stick you sell?" simple question right? (And incidentally the answer was 20GB - it was on the wall right behind him.) He lead me over to a display and started telling me about how they've just got this brand in which is available in 12 different colours, and he can order in any they don't have. I said "But these are only 6GB, is that the largest you do?" and he started telling me that if I went to their website I can order ones with custom designs...

    As far as I could tell he was incapable of seeing a female customer as being interested in anything except the appearance of the product, even when I had clearly told him what I wanted. In the end I walked out, went to their competitors, asked a female member of staff and got a straight answer immediately.

    And that's a relatively innocuous example. As far as I could tell he wasn't flirting and I don't think he was intentionally talking down to me (and I was alone so he couldn't ignore me and talk to a man I happened to be with instead, which is another common problem when buying any kind of tech) he just let his assumptions about women completely over-rule the actual question.

    Online I suspect it's also that most people tend to assume everyone else is like them unless told otherwise. The other common example of this is people who assume everyone is American. For example giving prices in dollars on an international website without specifying they mean American dollars, or assuming everyone has to pay for health care and can't drink until they're 21.
    PC EU player | She/her/hers | PAWS (Positively Against Wrip-off Stuff) - Say No to Crown Crates!

    "Remember in this game we call life that no one said it's fair"
  • Pevey
    Pevey
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    I am a female and generally prefer female characters. But I have three male characters: 2 argonians and 1 altmer. I just don't like the way female argonians sound or the way female altmer look, so I made those toons male.
  • Becky617
    Becky617
    RedRook wrote: »
    Everstorm wrote: »
    Main reason I end up playing female characters in most games is the weird walking animation male characters often get. It bugs me, it's like they try really hard to make the females move elegantly and then just throw something together for the guys.

    Some games go the other way, too. All the cutscenes in DA: Inquisition have the same animations for the player character, man or woman - they only did the slouchy dude animations. Pretty hilarious/horrifying when your female character moves like a lady the rest of the time.

    Agree with the OP, more statistics please! Always interesting to see what people choose broken down numerically.

    ^That and I found that in DA: I the male running animation seemed weird when I first started to play it. But then again I'd just taken a break from Skyrim.

    When I play ESO I lean towards female characters. I have tried to play male characters but I end up deleting them due to how unhappy I am on the way they turned out.
  • mxxo
    mxxo
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    It´s only a theory.. but maybe its like this: Women/Girls tend to empathize more with their characters, while Men/Boys see them rather as toons, like another person, not themself. That would explain why Women/Girls play mostly femal characters and Men/Boys rather play both. Idk if this makes sense ;D
  • mustangmorgan31
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    I am a woman and I have 13/15 toons. Two are male and the rest are female. The two male are tanks. For some mental reason I feel tanks should be strong meaty men. lol
  • DanteYoda
    DanteYoda
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    Funnily i see more women in retail game stores these days than men.. Times have changed a lot.. When i was a kid women found out you were a gamer it was a sexual and social death sentence.
  • ZeroXFF
    ZeroXFF
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    Danikat wrote: »
    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    Osteos wrote: »
    From my experience meeting and playing with lots of different people, most players have both. I am female and most of my characters are female, when I have the option I usually take advantage of it. I do have 2 male characters though simply because that is what I envisioned when making the character.


    Oh and the "there's no women on the internet" joke isn't funny and just makes you a beef wit.

    It's not really a joke, it's a philosophy. One of the great features that the internet provides is anonymity. By telling your gender you are reducing the anonymity you enjoy, effectively diminishing one of its great features.

    Furthermore, saying you're a woman and then presenting an argument will give you more support than your actual idea deserves, because there will inevitably be some white knights who will want to show you that they are the good guys that you should let in your pants (regardless of whether they have a chance). This results in discussions being derailed, and in the early days of the internet (i.e. when this meme was created) was justifiably seen as a manipulative tactic to win an argument, because if your intent was not to manipulate, you wouldn't mention your gender, as it's irrelevant to most discussions taking place.

    On top of that there is a safety concern. People (both male and female) are more likely to want to help women and more likely to trust women. So anyone posing as a woman (even if it's a man) has an easier time exploiting or defrauding someone online. So to protect yourself it's best to assume that anyone who claims to be a woman is actually a man, unless you can verify it.

    In essence the main reason that this meme is singling out women, is because most internet users at the time when this meme was created were indeed men. But the essence of this meme is that what you have between your legs is irrelevant, what's relevant are your arguments.

    It never meant that there are literally no women on the internet, it was just the desire to create a perfect meritocracy where factors determining social status IRL (like gender, but also wealth, family background, race, education etc) would not influence the discourse, and ideas would stand on their own merit.

    Now I can of course see why you would think it makes one a "beef wit" by making that statement. You've been told since the 60's (with increasing intensity as time went by) that men are superficial and shallow, only think about one thing, and that everything men do is an assertion of male dominance over women. Hence this statement must be a territorial claim like "internet belongs to men" to be in line with everything you've been told all your life, so it's not surprising at all that you resort to outrage and insults, as you perceive it as nothing but misogyny and chauvinism. But it would do you good if you did learn about the meaning of the memes before stating your opinion on them, because then you would show the men who are actual misogynists and chauvinists that the stereotypes they hold about women are not true.

    So yeah, there are no women on the internet.

    That's interesting, I always thought it was pretty much the exact opposite. If you say you're a woman you're opening yourself up to some people (no not all, but enough that it's annoying) immediately dismissing your contributions to absolutely any discussion as uninformed or irrelevant so if you want to be taken seriously it's best to keep quiet on that point.

    Likewise it tends to lead to any request for help being derailed with irrelevant comments and decidedly unwelcome 'offers' which have absolutely nothing to do with the actual request so if you actually want help with anything it's best to just let them assume you're a man and therefore assume you are otherwise fully capable and not an object of interest for them so they'll just answer the question and move on.

    I once walked into a shop in real life and asked one of the staff "What's the largest capacity USB stick you sell?" simple question right? (And incidentally the answer was 20GB - it was on the wall right behind him.) He lead me over to a display and started telling me about how they've just got this brand in which is available in 12 different colours, and he can order in any they don't have. I said "But these are only 6GB, is that the largest you do?" and he started telling me that if I went to their website I can order ones with custom designs...

    As far as I could tell he was incapable of seeing a female customer as being interested in anything except the appearance of the product, even when I had clearly told him what I wanted. In the end I walked out, went to their competitors, asked a female member of staff and got a straight answer immediately.

    And that's a relatively innocuous example. As far as I could tell he wasn't flirting and I don't think he was intentionally talking down to me (and I was alone so he couldn't ignore me and talk to a man I happened to be with instead, which is another common problem when buying any kind of tech) he just let his assumptions about women completely over-rule the actual question.

    Online I suspect it's also that most people tend to assume everyone else is like them unless told otherwise. The other common example of this is people who assume everyone is American. For example giving prices in dollars on an international website without specifying they mean American dollars, or assuming everyone has to pay for health care and can't drink until they're 21.

    Trust me, there are bull**** merchants selling crap to both genders. It happened more than once that I went to a shop to buy something and instead of being offered something functional with good value I get offered some overpriced crap that I wouldn't want if it was given to me for free. For example I went to a shop once to look for a mobile phone I'd want to buy, I told the guy at the shop that I want something with good performance, a replaceable battery and a microSD card slot because I will want to use it for more than 2 years. What does he offer? An iPhone that has neither of the features I listed, but supposedly has a good selfie camera and is very popular as if that's of any relevance.

    I don't know if it's pure incompetence or an attempt to sell something that results in the highest profit margins, but don't automatically assume that it's because of your gender.

    Women nowadays look for sexism everywhere ( #NotAll , but enough that it's annoying). I had a conversation once with a woman in the same class, studying computer science. At some point I asked why she decided to study computer science, and I couldn't accept the answer "I just always found it interesting and wanted to learn how to do it", so I kept trying to get details out of her. The reason is, everyone else I ever asked about it had a story to tell, either they were already doing something in that field and wanted to get better, or they wanted to do something and they needed the skills to do it, or they were spending all their time at the PC screen already, so they wanted something that would allow them to earn money doing it. But of course she became defensive and accused me of being sexist and assuming that women cannot be interested in computer science, even though that thought had never crossed my mind.

    So to loop back to the "there are no women on the internet" meme... If the conversation was online and I didn't know she was a woman, the accusation of sexism would not have made any sense, and the discussion would not have been derailed.
  • starkerealm
    starkerealm
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    malicia wrote: »
    There've been entire studies on avatar gender selection behavior. I forget the exact statistics, but most people prefer avatars that match their biology.

    Quite a difference between an avatar and a char, though. An avatar is supposed to represent something - so on a forum or a Discord the avatar represents the player.

    No, "avatar," in this case includes things like characters in Second Life and MMOs. Again, there's a non-trivial amount of actual research on the subject.
  • FakeFox
    FakeFox
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    I think the question is if character choice is based on what you identify with or what you are attracted to, not necessarily in a sexual sense. For me it is clearly the second in MMOs, hence why all my characters are female.
    EU/PC (GER) - Healermain since 2014 - 50305 Achievement Points - Youtube (PvE Healing Guides, Builds & Gameplay)
  • Girl_Number8
    Girl_Number8
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    Hello Devs and people from Zos and stuff,
    hello @ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_KaiSchober and @ZOS_JessicaFolsom

    there is something i am really really really interested in. There is a subjective feeling, that most female players play female chars and a huge part of male players play female chars, but there is no official statistic showing it.

    I really would like to know, how many chracters in ESO on the differenz platforms are male and how many are female, a percentage. No need to split it into female and male players owning them, just a general number of heroes and heroines in the time of the interregnum.

    It would be so awesome, if you could provide a number. Please please please *_* :)

    You sound like a stalker there, Dexter.

    Cringe x10 :/
    Edited by Girl_Number8 on October 17, 2018 1:02PM
  • AlienSlof
    AlienSlof
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    Female player here, with a mixture:

    PC EU: 5 males, 4 females, 1 gender-neutral

    PC NA 1 male, 1 gender-neutral

    I prefer the males because I'm the one who looks at them most and I prefer looking at a pert male tush! :D
    Edited by AlienSlof on October 17, 2018 1:00PM
    RIP Atherton, my beautiful little gentle friend. I will miss you forever. Without you I am a hollow shell.
  • Dont_do_drugs
    Dont_do_drugs
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    Hello Devs and people from Zos and stuff,
    hello @ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_KaiSchober and @ZOS_JessicaFolsom

    there is something i am really really really interested in. There is a subjective feeling, that most female players play female chars and a huge part of male players play female chars, but there is no official statistic showing it.

    I really would like to know, how many chracters in ESO on the differenz platforms are male and how many are female, a percentage. No need to split it into female and male players owning them, just a general number of heroes and heroines in the time of the interregnum.

    It would be so awesome, if you could provide a number. Please please please *_* :)

    You sound like a stalker there, Dexter. Cringe x10 :/

    if thats all u have to contribute...

    Get Stuff like this (but not this stuff)


    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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    They can only bla-bla and waste gold on feeding their ego. I am disappointed."

    Egal, wie gut du Schach spielst, die Taube wird alle Figuren umwerfen, auf das Brett kacken und herumstolzieren, als hätte sie gewonnen.

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  • Reistr_the_Unbroken
    Reistr_the_Unbroken
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    I’m a female but I have four characters, 1 female and 3 males lmao.
  • Girl_Number8
    Girl_Number8
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    Hello Devs and people from Zos and stuff,
    hello @ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_KaiSchober and @ZOS_JessicaFolsom

    there is something i am really really really interested in. There is a subjective feeling, that most female players play female chars and a huge part of male players play female chars, but there is no official statistic showing it.

    I really would like to know, how many chracters in ESO on the differenz platforms are male and how many are female, a percentage. No need to split it into female and male players owning them, just a general number of heroes and heroines in the time of the interregnum.

    It would be so awesome, if you could provide a number. Please please please *_* :)

    You sound like a stalker there, Dexter. Cringe x10 :/

    if thats all u have to contribute...

    It was a good contribution.
  • Dont_do_drugs
    Dont_do_drugs
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    Hello Devs and people from Zos and stuff,
    hello @ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_KaiSchober and @ZOS_JessicaFolsom

    there is something i am really really really interested in. There is a subjective feeling, that most female players play female chars and a huge part of male players play female chars, but there is no official statistic showing it.

    I really would like to know, how many chracters in ESO on the differenz platforms are male and how many are female, a percentage. No need to split it into female and male players owning them, just a general number of heroes and heroines in the time of the interregnum.

    It would be so awesome, if you could provide a number. Please please please *_* :)

    You sound like a stalker there, Dexter. Cringe x10 :/

    if thats all u have to contribute...

    It was a good contribution.

    Sure, sure. Here, a cookie..

    Apps-preferences-web-browser-cookies-icon.png

    Get Stuff like this (but not this stuff)


    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    "I have too admit. People leading trade guilds in this game are quite stupid. Not stupid like fools, but stupid like leaders.
    They can only bla-bla and waste gold on feeding their ego. I am disappointed."

    Egal, wie gut du Schach spielst, die Taube wird alle Figuren umwerfen, auf das Brett kacken und herumstolzieren, als hätte sie gewonnen.

    Arkadius Trade Tools
    Modular framework, now open for authors who want to add own tabs.

    My Donation (Arkadius' Trade Tools Addon)
    First external ATT tab contribution.

    Port to Friend's House Addon
    Check out the new Port to Friend's House library and port to contributers houses:
    Deutsch | English

  • Girl_Number8
    Girl_Number8
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    ✭✭✭
    Hello Devs and people from Zos and stuff,
    hello @ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_KaiSchober and @ZOS_JessicaFolsom

    there is something i am really really really interested in. There is a subjective feeling, that most female players play female chars and a huge part of male players play female chars, but there is no official statistic showing it.

    I really would like to know, how many chracters in ESO on the differenz platforms are male and how many are female, a percentage. No need to split it into female and male players owning them, just a general number of heroes and heroines in the time of the interregnum.

    It would be so awesome, if you could provide a number. Please please please *_* :)

    You sound like a stalker there, Dexter. Cringe x10 :/

    if thats all u have to contribute...

    It was a good contribution.

    Sure, sure. Here, a cookie..

    Apps-preferences-web-browser-cookies-icon.png

    I don't like cookies from strangers, so you can have it back. I just think your post is sort of creepy, cx.
  • vometia
    vometia
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    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    Women nowadays look for sexism everywhere ( #NotAll , but enough that it's annoying). I had a conversation once with a woman in the same class, studying computer science. At some point I asked why she decided to study computer science, and I couldn't accept the answer "I just always found it interesting and wanted to learn how to do it", so I kept trying to get details out of her. The reason is, everyone else I ever asked about it had a story to tell, either they were already doing something in that field and wanted to get better, or they wanted to do something and they needed the skills to do it, or they were spending all their time at the PC screen already, so they wanted something that would allow them to earn money doing it. But of course she became defensive and accused me of being sexist and assuming that women cannot be interested in computer science, even though that thought had never crossed my mind.

    So to loop back to the "there are no women on the internet" meme... If the conversation was online and I didn't know she was a woman, the accusation of sexism would not have made any sense, and the discussion would not have been derailed.
    Why did you insist on what seemed to be a more comprehensive explanation than you might expect from anyone else? I'd probably react in much the same way. I went into computing almost by default as I had some experience of it and didn't really know what to do with my life otherwise. If someone kept saying, "but why, but why, that's not a good enough reason" I'd likewise tell them to GTFO. I imagine the same rationale is true of plenty of guys in computing too.

    What is interesting is that there were way more women in computing when I started in the late '80s. Back then it was just another career so if there was an opening that resulted in a bit more money or was less boring or had better prospects or any of the usual reasons, people would move into it, male and female. The lack of women in IT seems to be a more recent problem and if I had to name a single cause I'd blame the awful management that became especially toxic in the '90s: long hours, aggressive work environments, job insecurity, offshoring, constant on-call, endless other nonsense that stops a person doing their job and often completely tips over the work-life balance thing. I know the guys don't like it either but they tend to try to tough it out but it shouldn't be like that.
  • Armatesz
    Armatesz
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    My username is a name that doesn't define gender. As for what I picked for a character I flipped a coin twice. First coin flip was to determine if I will be always the same gender... it went with heads. The second coin flip was to determine gender... which was putting me at male. It is really that unoriginal as that which makes it that much simpler. That and funnier to make a story for later on.
    Ärmätèsz
    Xbox NA
    Guildless (by choice)
  • ghastley
    ghastley
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    I'm sure there is also a dimension of RP avatar, versus RP companion going on in these games. Is the character in the game supposed to be you, or are you their guide and mentor, or simply an observer? I'd imagine the implied relationship between the player and the character will influence the gender choice.

    And there's the Tomb Raider effect. If you got accustomed to playing a female character in that game, you'd be more "at home" with the same situation in another, even if it's a different genre.
  • Danikat
    Danikat
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    FakeFox wrote: »
    I think the question is if character choice is based on what you identify with or what you are attracted to, not necessarily in a sexual sense. For me it is clearly the second in MMOs, hence why all my characters are female.

    What if it's neither?

    I don't think any of my characters are like me, and I don't try to make them attractive. To me making a character in a game is like creating a character for a story I'm writing - I make one to fit the role they're going to play in the story and fit everything to that. So it comes down to what kind of person I imagine them being and which gender I think fits best.

    I guess sometimes being attractive, or ugly, could be part of that. But apart from '"Well he's going to be a vampire so there's no point worrying about a lot of the details" and "I want as many scars as possible" it's never really come up for me.
    PC EU player | She/her/hers | PAWS (Positively Against Wrip-off Stuff) - Say No to Crown Crates!

    "Remember in this game we call life that no one said it's fair"
  • paulsimonps
    paulsimonps
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    My wife has 11/11 Female Toons. I got 4/10 Male and 6/10 Female.
  • Salvas_Aren
    Salvas_Aren
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    I like my girl toons look cute and my boy toons look awesome.

    I started with a male char in Skyrim because playing a girl feeled weird. Then I stumbled into modding and still playing a male char feeled weird with all the options of adding enchanted jewelry to my build.

    11130-1-1330722541.jpg

    Who can agree?
  • ZeroXFF
    ZeroXFF
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    vometia wrote: »
    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    Women nowadays look for sexism everywhere ( #NotAll , but enough that it's annoying). I had a conversation once with a woman in the same class, studying computer science. At some point I asked why she decided to study computer science, and I couldn't accept the answer "I just always found it interesting and wanted to learn how to do it", so I kept trying to get details out of her. The reason is, everyone else I ever asked about it had a story to tell, either they were already doing something in that field and wanted to get better, or they wanted to do something and they needed the skills to do it, or they were spending all their time at the PC screen already, so they wanted something that would allow them to earn money doing it. But of course she became defensive and accused me of being sexist and assuming that women cannot be interested in computer science, even though that thought had never crossed my mind.

    So to loop back to the "there are no women on the internet" meme... If the conversation was online and I didn't know she was a woman, the accusation of sexism would not have made any sense, and the discussion would not have been derailed.
    Why did you insist on what seemed to be a more comprehensive explanation than you might expect from anyone else? I'd probably react in much the same way. I went into computing almost by default as I had some experience of it and didn't really know what to do with my life otherwise. If someone kept saying, "but why, but why, that's not a good enough reason" I'd likewise tell them to GTFO. I imagine the same rationale is true of plenty of guys in computing too.

    What is interesting is that there were way more women in computing when I started in the late '80s. Back then it was just another career so if there was an opening that resulted in a bit more money or was less boring or had better prospects or any of the usual reasons, people would move into it, male and female. The lack of women in IT seems to be a more recent problem and if I had to name a single cause I'd blame the awful management that became especially toxic in the '90s: long hours, aggressive work environments, job insecurity, offshoring, constant on-call, endless other nonsense that stops a person doing their job and often completely tips over the work-life balance thing. I know the guys don't like it either but they tend to try to tough it out but it shouldn't be like that.

    That would have been a sufficient explanation as it would fall in one of the categories that I outlined before that are consistent with the responses I got from other people. But all I was given was "I found it interesting" without any explanation or indication of previous experience. If she was a guy, her response wouldn't have been enough either. That you would respond in the same way is just proving my point that women look for sexism everywhere.

    And you may very well be right about the reasons why there are few women in IT, but that's besides the point, because I didn't make any assumptions based on her gender. It was her who thought she knew what I was thinking because I was a man, and everything men say that individual women don't like must be down to sexism.

    Also, keep in mind it wasn't a job interview, it was just a friendly conversation on the way home to get to know the person I'm supposed to do homework with on that subject for the rest of the semester.
  • MooseKnuckles88
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    Why did you make this thread with no poll to gather at least some stats just from this post?

    And FWIW, I'm a male with 3 female characters. I started the game with a male character but just hated everything about it, so I did a race change and changed everything else about that toon too. Since then I made two more female characters. The game has plenty of horrendous looking NPCs...
  • Dont_do_drugs
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    Why did you make this thread with no poll to gather at least some stats just from this post?

    And FWIW, I'm a male with 3 female characters. I started the game with a male character but just hated everything about it, so I did a race change and changed everything else about that toon too. Since then I made two more female characters. The game has plenty of horrendous looking NPCs...

    there already has been a poll in the past, so why should i do it again? also its only forum, and the amount of people in the forum is a) very low compared to the ingamers and usually from my experience also b) not representative, because people deciding to discuss in forums are usually more dedicated and a bit "otherwise" (in a good way) than the casual questers.

    i asked zos for official statistics. i like how it ended with people telling their own "story" and explaining their decision a lot.

    Get Stuff like this (but not this stuff)


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  • Katahdin
    Katahdin
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    15 characters
    6 male, 9 female
    Edited by Katahdin on October 17, 2018 5:10PM
    Beta tester November 2013
  • BretonMage
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    I've noticed this topic cropping up from time to time on different gaming forums (Skyrim, Dragon Age etc), and I have noticed that females more often than not tend to play females, and males will have a slight preference for playing males, but will play females with more frequency than the converse. Not a hard and fast rule of course, and it can have a variety of reasons, but I gravitate towards the one put forward by @mxxo that women may be more likely to play characters they relate to, whilst men may be more likely to play them as fictional video game characters (ones which they like the look of, it seems).

    ZeroXFF wrote: »
    Women nowadays look for sexism everywhere ( #NotAll , but enough that it's annoying).
    I wish there was a super power that would turn all men who said this into women for a week. Would love to see how they appreciate having their stated facts largely treated as mere opinions, and their opinions summarily dismissed.

    Also, the no women on the internet meme would be completely illogical if following the reasoning put forward by you. In fact if people actually wanted no gender biases, they should just assume any internet user to be both male/female until gender is claimed.
  • Ardaghion
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    i asked zos for official statistics. i like how it ended with people telling their own "story" and explaining their decision a lot.

    Did you expect otherwise? If you only wanted official stats from Zos you could have sent a PM to one of the community managers.

    I had been reading and considered telling my own "story" but seeing as I don't really fit any binary definition as simple as ESO does, it wouldn't matter.
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